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Suzanne H. Woolsey on transsexualism Suzanne Haley Woolsey was Chief Communications Officer at Joseph Henry Press, the publishing arm of the National Academies Press, during the time they decided to publish The Man Who Would Be Queen by J. Michael Bailey. She is the wife of James Woolsey, who, among other things, served as Jimmy Carter's first director of the CIA. He is also a notable neoconservative, though he reached that philosophy through a circuitous route through the corridors of liberal power. Suzanne Woolsey's 1970 dissertation was titled "Effects of experimenter race and segregated or desegregated school experience on some aspects of the social interaction of white and negro children." Interestingly, experimenter effect is one of the chief scientific criticisms of the methodology used by Bailey, Blanchard, and Lawrence. During the Carter Administration she served in high level positions in the Office of Management and Budget. During the Reagan Administration she worked outside of the government. Woolsey began work at the National Academy of Science in 1989 as Executive Director of the Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences, responsible for oversight of all of the boards in those fields. Later she became chief operating officer of the NAS and then Chief Communications Officer. Woolsey sent the following form letter to anyone who wrote to express concern about the lack of science in J. Michael Bailey's The Man Who Would Be Queen. I received my copy on 22 May 2003.
Woolsey leaves National Academies to advise war profiteers In January 2004, she became a director of Fluor Corporation, which has $1.6 billion in Iraq related contracts. She also serves as a director of the Institute for Defense Analyses which also has war interests, and received modest compensation for that role according to the article. The Woolseys' overlapping affiliations are part of a growing pattern in Washington in which individuals play key roles in quasi-governmental organizations advising officials on major policy issues but also are involved with private businesses in related fields. Such activities generally are not covered by conflict of interest laws or ethics rules. But they underscore an insiders network in which contacts and relationships developed inside the government can meld with individual financial interests. Suzanne Woolsey is also affiliated with other firms, including the Paladin Capital Group, a Washington venture capital firm in which her husband is a partner. Suzanne Woolsey did not respond to messages left for her at Paladin and at Fluor. References Roche, WF. Private, Public Roles Overlap in Washington. Los Angeles Times.
8 August 2004 Holloway J, Boyette L. Fluor Adds Suzanne H. Woolsey to Board of Directors. Fluor website. 27 January 2004. Clemons SC. Woolsey's web: Structure and corruption in Iraq. The Washington Note. 8 August 2004. |
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